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More women, please
Moyiga
Nduru, Inter Press Service (IPS)
August 19, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=34402
MASERU - The annual
summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) wrapped
up Friday with a call to speed up the process of increasing women's
representation at all levels of government in the 14-nation body.
"By the time we meet in Maseru again, say in ten years, I would
like to see at least three or four women heads of state among you,"
Lesotho's monarch, Letsie the Third, told a banquet for the all-male
SADC leaders held in the capital of Maseru, where the two-day meeting
took place. Female delegates present at the ceremony responded to
his remarks with deafening ululation.
SADC had set 2005 as the deadline for having 30 percent of decision-making
posts in member states occupied by women, reflecting demands in
the Platform of Action developed at the Fourth World Conference
on Women -- held in the Chinese capital of Beijing, in 1995.
While not all countries achieved this goal, last year's summit --
held in Botswana's capital, Gaborone -- set a goal of 50 percent
representation in line with African Union targets.
"We noted the slow progress made by member states in attaining the
set target and urged member states to strive towards the attainment
of the 50 percent representation of women in these positions as
approved by Summit 2005," Tomothy Thahane, Lesotho's foreign affairs
minister and chairman of the SADC Council of Ministers, told journalists.
According to the June 2006 edition of the 'SADC Gender Monitor',
published by the Harare-based Southern African Research and Documentation
Centre, "Southern Africa has experienced a greater increase of women
in decision-making positions since the Beijing conference than anywhere
else in the world."
"The average representation of women in the parliaments of the region
now stands at 20 percent, with Mozambique and South Africa having
reached 30 percent or above," noted the document.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe also weighed in on the issue.
"We don't just need women presidents because they are women, but
we need good presidents. We have a number of women vice presidents
in this region; maybe one day women presidents would emerge out
of them," he said.
This was in reference to Zimbabwean Vice President Joyce Majuru,
and South African Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka. Luisa
Diogo was appointed Mozambique's first female prime minister in
2004.
A communiqué issued at the end of the summit further reaffirmed
SADC's commitment to 50 percent women's representation in decision-making
posts.
There was disappointment in the organisation's record on other issues.
"In (the SADC summit) in Mauritius in 2004, I explained then that
I was an old man in a hurry. I am now an older old man in a greater
hurry than was the case in 2004. You will therefore appreciate why
I am perturbed by the slow rate of implementation of our programmes,"
outgoing SADC chairman Festus Mogae, the president of Botswana,
said at the summit.
"The implementation of our programmes does not show that we remain
committed to the achievement of the milestones towards the attainment
of SADC's full integration, namely the free trade area, customs
union and common market," he added.
The organisation has pledged to institute a free trade area by 2008,
a common customs union by 2010, a common market by 2015, monetary
union by 2016 -- and a single currency by 2018.
In addition, Southern Africa -- home to about 230 million people
-- faces a massive hurdle in the form of the AIDS pandemic. According
to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, almost a third
of all HIV-positive persons live in the region.
"We still remain the epicentre of HIV and AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis,
which together with food insecurity are amongst the major challenges
of our region," observed Mogae.
"Last year alone, three million HIV- and AIDS-related deaths were
recorded, two million of which were in the SADC region. Food insecurity
no doubt compounds the infection rate."
Mogae also lamented that the construction of new premises for the
SADC secretariat in Gaborone, and recruitment of staff, was being
accomplished some five years behind schedule. Building is due to
start in March 2007.
In its final communiqué, the summit noted that while SADC
recorded overall growth of five percent in 2005, the region remained
below the seven percent target set by the United Nations for developing
nations to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Eight goals were agreed on by global leaders at the U.N. Millennium
Summit in 2000, in a bid to tackle the leading causes of under-development
by 2015.
The MDGs aim at halving extreme hunger and poverty, achieving universal
primary education, reducing maternal and child mortality, and promoting
gender equality.
The goals also focus on reversing the spread of AIDS and other diseases,
ensuring environmental sustainability and creating global partnerships
to tackle issues such as unfair trade rules. (END/2006)
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